Unless you have siblings. Then you’re the less successful evolutionary branch that died out.
Unless you have siblings. Then you’re the less successful evolutionary branch that died out.
It’s rather vague to me too, the most helpful summary I found was this one:
In general, the condition applies when:
- The processing isn’t required by law, but there’s a clear benefit to it;
- There is little risk of the processing infringing on data subjects’ privacy; and
- The data subject should reasonably expect their data to be used in that way.
So “we don’t have to do this, and most likely it won’t be privacy sensitive, and you probably already know we want to do this, but you can still opt out”
Source: https://www.itgovernance.eu/blog/en/the-gdpr-legitimate-interest-what-is-it-and-when-does-it-apply
Serves me right for trying to show off :D
Three genders, and 5 words for “the”: der, die, das, dem, den. Depending on the gender of the noun and its function in the sentence.
“God bless America” seems a more apt comparison. Seeing as “Sieg Heil” was meant to glorify Hitler, rather than inspire pride of the country. Besides that, comparing Ukraine to Nazi Germany seems a bit too “Russian propaganda” for my tastes.
I’m not convinced by this argument: at the back of the phone is a built-in LED (used as the flash). Which could be used for notifications too.
Phones with OLED screens could use part of the screen as a notification as well. Both of these can be accomplished in software. Currently you have to notice that something happens as it happens, otherwise you need to at leas activate the screen. The notification LED was useful in that you could glance at your phone and see if you missed something.
It gets worse: it’s extremely addictive. Research has shown that habitual users who want to detox die within 48 hours unless they start consuming it again.